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Attitudes to young offenders in the 20th and 21st centuries

In previous centuries, young offenders had been treated the same as adult offenders. However, this began to change in the 20th century. Young offenders were given different trials through special youth courts, and this continues today.

Young people do not now go to adult prisons. and young offender institutions were established in 1902 to deal with young people.

Since 1909, people below the age of 18 have been treated differently from adults, and the youth justice system has developed separately from the adult criminal justice system. This happened alongside a greater understanding of the development of the brain through neuroscientific and psychological research, and clinical practice in psychiatry and psychology.

Attitudes towards the have also changed. In 1908, an age of criminal responsibility was introduced for the first time, but it changed through the years. Initially, it was seven years of age, then with the 1998 Crime and Disorder Act it was raised to 10 years of age.